Tag: space

Nuclear space propulsion

Project Orion: Atom bombs as propellants. Those 50s guys had balls.

2007-05-04: Project Pluto

SLAM’s simple but revolutionary design called for the use of nuclear ramjet power, which would give the missile virtually unlimited range. Air forced into a duct as the missile flew would be heated by the reactor, causing it to expand, and exhaust out the back, providing thrust. Pluto’s namesake was Roman mythology’s ruler of the underworld — seemingly an apt inspiration for a locomotive-size missile that would travel at near-treetop level at 3x the speed of sound, tossing out hydrogen bombs as it roared overhead. Pluto’s designers calculated that its shock wave alone might kill people on the ground. Then there was the problem of fallout. In addition to gamma and neutron radiation from the unshielded reactor, Pluto’s nuclear ramjet would spew fission fragments out in its exhaust as it flew by


2014-11-23: The reason the Philae lander died after 60h is because the ESA couldn’t fit it with a nuclear battery, too much paranoia in Europe.
2017-12-04: A 10kw nuclear reactor for space exploration from nasa. bravo, especially considering the silliness of esa restrictions on nuclear propulsion in space.

2019-12-04: Pulsed Fission Fusion

Pulsed Fission-Fusion should be able to achieve 15 kW/kg and 30K seconds of ISP. This will be orders of magnitude improvement over competing systems such as nuclear electric, solar electric, and nuclear thermal propulsion that suffer from lower available power and inefficient thermodynamic cycles.

2022-01-30: How serious is NASA about nuclear?

Today’s push for nuclear power in space is a useful metric for measuring the seriousness of NASA’s—and the nation’s—lunar and Martian ambitions. In the context of human spaceflight, NASA has a well-known aversion to “new” (and thus presumably more risky) technology—but in this case, the “old” way makes an already perilous human endeavor needlessly difficult. For all the challenges of embracing nuclear power for pushing the horizon outward for humans in space, it is hard to make the case that tried-and-true chemical propulsion is easier or carries significantly less physical—and political—risk. Launching 10 International Space Stations’ worth of mass across 27 superheavy rocket launches for fuel alone for a single Mars mission would be a difficult pace for NASA to sustain. (That is more than 40 launches and at least $80b if the agency relies on the SLS.) And such a scenario assumes everything goes perfectly: sending help to a troubled crew on or around Mars would require 10s of additional fuel launches, and chemical propulsion allows very limited windows of opportunity for the liftoff of any rescue mission.

If, with a single technology, that alarmingly high number of ludicrously expensive launches could be cut down to 3—while also offering more chances to travel to Mars and back—how could a space agency that was earnest in its ambitions not pursue that approach? No miracles are necessary, and regulators and appropriators seem to agree that the time has come.

We can fly to Mars. Splitting atoms, it seems, is now the safest way to make that happen.

Virgin Suborbital

Virgin Galactic has a cool concept movie buried within a stupid flash site. next: orbital light

2013-09-08: virgin suborbital has been eclipsed in the last 2 years by spacex, but it’s nice to know that they are making good progress to begin operations in 2014.

2018-08-24:

Branson and his grandchildren were huddled around an iPad at their mountain lodge in Verbier, Switzerland, watching a live stream of the flight. At the end of the rocket-motor burn, the room erupted with delight. “Artie, my 3-year-old grandson, asked me why I was crying when everyone else was cheering,” Branson recalled. “It was just such a beautiful moment.”

He knew that Virgin Galactic still faced plenty of challenges. After a few more powered flights—on July 26th, Mackay and Masucci completed a 42-second rocket-powered flight, reaching 50 km—the pilots would go all the way into space. Once that goal was met, they’d need to make several repeat flights, in order to assure the public that SpaceShipTwo was ready to begin commercial service. Branson, who had been funding Virgin Galactic for 15 years, felt that redemption was finally near. “We’ve proved skeptics wrong”.

2021-07-12: congratulations to Virgin Galactic for their first suborbital tourism flight.

Solar System in Second Life

A few months ago, groundbreaking 3D builder and avatar fashion designer Aimee Weber decided to expand the limits of machinima too, creating a planetarium-worthy tour of the solar system within Second Life. It wasn’t just the professional polish of the movie that struck me, but far as I can tell, it’s the first fully-realized use of machinima for educational purposes. Rather than interview her, however, I asked her to blog a behind-the-scenes account

Solar sails

From the planetary society comes word that Cosmos 1, the first private solar sail craft is ready for launch on June 21, 2005. Solar sails have some very poetic capabilities. That is a remarkable 0.003c.

Ultimate space-manufactured solar sails will allow the possibility of Earth-Mars round trips with durations measured in months rather than years. The same technology may allow visits to the nearer stars at solar-system exit velocities higher than 1000 km /sec. The 1-way travel time to the Sun’s nearest interstellar neighbors (Proxima Centauri) will be ~1 ka for such spacecraft. Advances in laser and maser power-beaming technologies may eventually substantially reduce interstellar-voyage durations.

2020-01-10: Plans for 0.2c

$100m has been put into the Breakthrough Starshot project to push a sail up to 20% the speed of light and send an unmanned probe to Proxima Centauri in 20 years. There is progress on a stabilizing design for a sail to ride the laser beam

2020-06-26: Metamaterial sails

Extreme metamaterial solar sails as proposed here have the potential to shift the paradigm of space exploration enabling numerous low cost and high-speed missions to be launched anytime and anywhere. Such sails could gain accelerations over 60AU/yr when coupled to low mass spacecraft and dive to extreme proximity to the sun (just 2-5 solar radii). This velocity is 20x more than Voyager 1